![]() |
Hello valve lovers, wherever you are.
60 years ago saw the introduction of the Western Electric 300A and 300B
direct-heated power triode, RCA 45, 50, and 2A3 directly-heated power triodes, and RCA 27, 56, 76, 6P5, 6J5, and 6SN7 family of indirectly-heated triodes. Sixty years later, these devices continue to be the lowest distortion amplifying elements ever made. No pentode, bipolar transistor, JFET, or MOSFET has ever approached the distortion performance of mid-Thirties triodes. In addition to low distortion in the absolute sense, the distortion spectra of triodes is favorable, with a rapid fall-off of the upper harmonics. (This is not true for beam tetrodes, pentodes, or solid-state devices, which are intrinsically less linear.) If you ever want to put a solid-state designer on the spot, ask them which transistors were designed for high-fidelity audio applications ... and are they still on the market, ten or twenty years after they introduced? The sad fact is that solid-state devices have linearity well down on the list of design priorities, with feedback needed to clean up devices that were never primarily intended for audio. The automotive equivalent would be cars modified to use truck diesels ... OK for Soviet Russia maybe, but do you think you'd want to buy something like that if you had a choice? Yet this is the state of affairs in solid-state audio, with the electronic equivalent of an industrial diesel pressed into service in so-called "high-end" electronics. Lynn Olsen Keep the faith - "If it ain't glowing, it ain't going" === Andy Evans === Visit our Website:- http://www.artsandmedia.com Audio, music and health pages and interesting links. |
Hello valve lovers, wherever you are.
In article , Andy Evans
wrote: 60 years ago saw the introduction of the Western Electric 300A and 300B direct-heated power triode, RCA 45, 50, and 2A3 directly-heated power triodes, and RCA 27, 56, 76, 6P5, 6J5, and 6SN7 family of indirectly-heated triodes. Sixty years later, these devices continue to be the lowest distortion amplifying elements ever made. No pentode, bipolar transistor, JFET, or MOSFET has ever approached the distortion performance of mid-Thirties triodes. In addition to low distortion in the absolute sense, the distortion spectra of triodes is favorable, with a rapid fall-off of the upper harmonics. (This is not true for beam tetrodes, pentodes, or solid-state devices, which are intrinsically less linear.) Could you be more specific by what you mean above? Under what specific conditions of use, signal powers, etc, are you making the above comments? Slainte, Jim -- Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Audio Misc http://www.st-and.demon.co.uk/AudioMisc/index.html Armstrong Audio http://www.st-and.demon.co.uk/Audio/armstrong.html Barbirolli Soc. http://www.st-and.demon.co.uk/JBSoc/JBSoc.html |
Hello valve lovers, wherever you are.
Arny Krueger wrote:
Anybody who has seen and understood the plate curves for just about any Pentode should be laughing their butts off about now. I guess thats why he excluded Pentodes, and looking at the list of valves, indirectly heated triodes, or were you choosing to ignore that ? -- Nick |
Hello valve lovers, wherever you are.
Stewart Pinkerton wrote:
Yes, they were introduced around 25-30 years ago. OTOH, we do have this thing called 'progress' in SS devices, unlike valves. 6C33C Its progress, maybe not in the right way... If valves are so wonderful, why has nothing been produced which is better than the 300B, in 70 years? 212 though looking at lines, I would say the 45 was way better than the 300b -- Nick |
Hello valve lovers, wherever you are.
Arny Krueger wrote:
"Nick Gorham" wrote in message Arny Krueger wrote: Anybody who has seen and understood the plate curves for just about any Pentode should be laughing their butts off about now. I guess thats why he excluded Pentodes, and looking at the list of valves, indirectly heated triodes, or were you choosing to ignore that ? By doing so he excluded an apples-to-apples comparison. Comparing a transitor to a triode is not an apples-to-apples comparison because the transistor has so much greater amplification. If you apply enough local feedback to a transistor amplifier to make it comparable to a triode, it's often even more linear. Yes, agreed, gain is cheap with transistors, but you are still assuming that feedback is without its cost in sonic terms. And before you go off on one of your rants, a zero (global) feedback SET does some things that no other type of amp does. Yes, it has faults, thats why I don't at the moment have one, and yes, to get it anywhere near usable you are talking about a high cost if only for the iron. BUT, sit someone down infront of a well designed SET, and a high enough sensitivity speaker and it will communicate to them is a way that nothing else can. And no, you can't sample that sound and push it through a comparitor. -- Nick |
Hello valve lovers, wherever you are.
On Wed, 23 Jul 2003 00:51:14 +0100, Nick Gorham
wrote: Stewart Pinkerton wrote: If valves are so wonderful, why has nothing been produced which is better than the 300B, in 70 years? 212 though looking at lines, I would say the 45 was way better than the 300b The 845? That's a mid-thirties valve designed for use in radio transmitters............ -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
Hello valve lovers, wherever you are.
On Wed, 23 Jul 2003 00:58:51 +0100, Nick Gorham
wrote: Arny Krueger wrote: "Nick Gorham" wrote in message Arny Krueger wrote: Anybody who has seen and understood the plate curves for just about any Pentode should be laughing their butts off about now. I guess thats why he excluded Pentodes, and looking at the list of valves, indirectly heated triodes, or were you choosing to ignore that ? By doing so he excluded an apples-to-apples comparison. Comparing a transitor to a triode is not an apples-to-apples comparison because the transistor has so much greater amplification. If you apply enough local feedback to a transistor amplifier to make it comparable to a triode, it's often even more linear. Yes, agreed, gain is cheap with transistors, but you are still assuming that feedback is without its cost in sonic terms. How about the internal feedback in triodes? :-) And before you go off on one of your rants, a zero (global) feedback SET does some things that no other type of amp does. Well, we can certainly agree on that!! Yes, it has faults, thats why I don't at the moment have one, and yes, to get it anywhere near usable you are talking about a high cost if only for the iron. BUT, sit someone down infront of a well designed SET, That's kinda like 'military intelligence', ain't it? :-) and a high enough sensitivity speaker and it will communicate to them is a way that nothing else can. Bull****. And no, you can't sample that sound and push it through a comparitor. IOW, it's all in your imagination, and your knowledge of the cost and 'exoticness' of the device. -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
Hello valve lovers, wherever you are.
Stewart Pinkerton wrote:
On Wed, 23 Jul 2003 00:51:14 +0100, Nick Gorham wrote: Stewart Pinkerton wrote: If valves are so wonderful, why has nothing been produced which is better than the 300B, in 70 years? 212 though looking at lines, I would say the 45 was way better than the 300b The 845? That's a mid-thirties valve designed for use in radio transmitters............ Agreed, but FWIW, I remember you rating this http://www.nagrausa.com/nagra_VPA.htm In a earlier post, its got them in. -- Nick |
Hello valve lovers, wherever you are.
Stewart Pinkerton wrote:
And no, you can't sample that sound and push it through a comparitor. IOW, it's all in your imagination, and your knowledge of the cost and 'exoticness' of the device. Maybe, not that bothered, but I don't see how its exotic, just the reverse I would have said. -- Nick |
Hello valve lovers, wherever you are.
Could you be more specific by what you mean above? Under what specific
conditions of use, signal powers, etc, are you making the above comments? These are excerpts from Lynn Olsen's very interesting site, not my words. You have to read the original in full, rather than making comments on excerpts, however tempting that may be! http://www.aloha-audio.com/ - look at the Libraries section. Cheers, Andy === Andy Evans === Visit our Website:- http://www.artsandmedia.com Audio, music and health pages and interesting links. |
All times are GMT. The time now is 03:20 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO 3.0.0
Copyright ©2004-2006 AudioBanter.co.uk